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The Irresponsible Self: On Laughter and the Novel
 
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The Irresponsible Self: On Laughter and the Novel [Hardcover]

James Wood
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Philip Horne, Guardian

'the most urgent and morally demanding critic around is the brilliant James Wood...a powerful collection'

Sam Leith, Daily Telegraph

'breathtakingly good...delightful and insightful'

Scotland on Sunday

'a delight to read...read this book and wonder'

Financial Times

'This is a collection to be read by anyone who wouldn't normally dream of reading literary criticism'

Product Description

When James Wood's first collection of essays, The Broken Estate, was published in 1999, the reviewers hailed a master critic. John Banville described Wood as a 'a close reader of genius-illuminating and exciting and compelling', and Malcolm Bradbury described him as 'a true critic: an urgent, impassioned reader of literature, a tireless interpreter, a live and learned intelligence'; Adam Begley, in the Financial Times, said that 'Wood is not just a keen critic, our best, but a superb writer'; Geoff Dyer admired the 'passionately sustained vigour of his writing' which 'towered above most of what passes for criticism'; Natasha Walter, in the Independent, described The Broken Estate as 'a book that makes you feel, having closed it, as if your mind has been oxygenated'. The common thread in Wood's latest collection of essays is what makes us laugh - and the book is an attempt to distinguish between the perhaps rather limited English comedy (as seen in Waugh, for example) and a 'continental' tragic-comedy, which he sees as real, universal and Quixotic. A particularly acerbic, and very funny, essay - which has been widely celebrated - deals with Zadie Smith, Rushdie, Pynchon and DeLillo,

From the Publisher

A collection of dazzling essays from one of the world's finest and most controversial literary critics. --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

About the Author

James Wood was born in 1965. From 1991 to 1995 he was the Chief Literary Critic of the Guardian, in London, and since then has been a Senior Editor at The New Republic, in Washington D. C. His reviews and essays appear regularly in that magazine, in The New Yorker, and in the London Review of Books. A collection of essays, The Broken Estate, appeared in 1999. His first novel, The Book Against God, was published by Cape in 2003.
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